The Electronic Eccentricity of Zola Jesus

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 2 MIN.

''I wanted to be a musician ever since I was four,'' Nika Danilova says. And by age 13, Danilov, an American of Ukrainian descent, had settled on a stage name: Zola Jesus. ''I had made it a mission to just completely alienate myself from my peers.''

The hybrid name pays homage to French writer Emile Zola and the central figure of Christianity. ''I really liked the idea of having Jesus in my name to kind of re-appropriate that symbol for myself,'' says Danilova, who, surrounded by Lutherans and Catholics in rural Wisconsin, was raised in an atheist household.

However much the name may have alienated her in Wisconsin, Danilova has since made a name for herself as Zola Jesus among indie/electronic music connoisseurs, particularly in the past few years. Her eccentric, passionate sound - like a wilder Florence Welsh - is very British in influence, from Kate Bush to the Cocteau Twins. And its regular lyrical focus about overcoming adversity has found appeal among LGBT listeners.

''I think my music has a feeling of openness and liberation,'' she says. ''I think that draws fans from the gay community and people that maybe have felt oppressed in one way or another.''

Earlier this year Zola Jesus released "Versions," an album featuring string covers of the electronic songs in her repertoire. [She was scheduled to stop at the Hirshhorn Museum in San Francisco as part of a tour with a string quartet led by JG Thirlwell but that gig was canceled thanks to the government shutdown.]

''There's just an oversaturation of synth music right now,'' she explains, going on to note that her next album will also likely be orchestral in nature. ''Now with access to classical musicians I can fully realize all of my wildest dreams.''

"Versions" is available from Sacred Bones Records: sacredbonesrecords.com/releases/sbr102


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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